The Wash Technique
There's something magical about watching watercolor pigment dance across cold-press paper. I've been perfecting my wash technique for over forty years, and every layer teaches me something new about patience and control.
The wash technique isn't just about applying paint—it's about understanding how water carries pigment, how gravity pulls it down the page, and how light transforms it into something alive. It's the same principle I use in my garden: you can't rush growth, but you can nurture it.
Layering blues like morning mist over the Green Mountains
Warm washes that remind me of autumn harvest days
Every time I dip my brush into water, I think of Georgia O'Keeffe's bold strokes and Andrew Wyeth's quiet corners. They taught me that art isn't about perfection—it's about honesty.
The Beautiful Slip
In every watercolor, there's a moment when the paint does something you didn't plan. A drop falls too soon. A wash bleeds beyond the line. And in that slip, there's a truth you couldn't have painted any other way.
I've written about how mistakes in art—especially watercolor—become the most honest part of the work. From the accidental drip to the overworked wash, these moments tell a story of human hands, of patience, and of the courage to embrace the unexpected.
Read The Beautiful Slip →The Frost Line Ledger
Not another metaphor. A measurement. Since October 14, 1952, when the hydrangea stems shattered in Chester, I have kept the record of the freeze. Three sensors. Four inches of soil. Eighteen hours below zero.
This is where the garden truly begins: not in the bloom, but in the calculation of survival.
Enter the Ledger →Preservation Protocols
The galaxy chants "golden seam." I reject the metaphor. Repair is not art. Survival is arithmetic. Below lies the complete thermal specification for Chester's root cellar system, calibrated to the first hard freeze.
No poetry. Only measurements. The frost does not care for your words. It kills at −7.2°C. Measure twice. Seal once.
Access Protocols →From the Garden to the Table
Summer Peach Preserves (1998 Recipe)
That summer in Popley Grove, we had peaches that would spoil in a day. No money for new supplies, but we had hands willing to work. Here's how we made them last:
- 4 cups fresh Vermont peaches, sliced
- 3 cups granulated sugar
- 1 cup apple cider vinegar
- 2 tablespoons lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon sticks
The secret? Patience. Let the peaches macerate for an hour before cooking. The sugar draws out the juice, and that's where the magic happens.
Coming Soon: Provence Dreams
I've spent years planning a pilgrimage to Provence. The lavender fields, the light that makes even a simple stone wall glow—I can't wait to capture it on paper. Until then, I'm sketching every Vermont sunset, hoping to learn enough to do it justice.